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The
Jewish Encyclopedia was an
encyclopedia originally published between 1901 and 1906 by Funk and Wagnalls. It contained over 15,000 articles in 12 volumes on the history and then-current state of Judaism and the Jews as of 1901. It is now a
public domain resource.
Jenny Mendelsohn, of University of Toronto Libraries, in an online guide to major sources of information about Jews and Judaism says of this work, "Although published in the early 1900s, this was a work highly regarded for its scholarship. Much of the material is still of value to researchers in Jewish History." Jenny Mendelsohn, Academic Guide to Jewish History: Encyclopedias and Biographies, University of Toronto Libraries. Last update: August 13, 2006. Accessed October 7, 2006.
Reform Judaism rabbi Joshua L. Segal calls it, "a remarkable piece of Jewish scholarship" and adds, "For events prior to 1900, it is considered to offer a level of scholarship superior to either of the more recent Jewish Encyclopedias written in English". Joshua L. Segal, Rabbi's Message: Nov. 2003 - Cheshvan 5764: A Jewish Reference Library at Betenu,
Betenu, Volume 21, No. 4: Nov. 2003. Accessed online October 7, 2006.
The
Jewish Encyclopedia and
Wissenschaft des Judentums
The scholarly style of the
Jewish Encyclopedia is very much in the mode of
Wissenschaft des Judentums studies, an approach to Jewish scholarship and religion that flourished in 19th century Germany; indeed, the Encyclopedia may be regarded as the culmination of this movement (Levy 2002), anticipating the movement's ultimate dispersion in the 20th century to Jewish Studies departments in the
United States and Israel. The scholarly authorities cited in the Encyclopedia—besides the classical and medieval exegesis—are almost uniformly Wissenschaft personalities such as
Leopold Zunz, Moritz Steinschneider,
Solomon Schechter, Wilhelm Bacher, Samuel Judah Löb Rapoport, David Zvi Hoffman,
Heinrich Graetz, etc. This particular scholarly style can be seen in the
Jewish Encyclopedia's almost obsessive attention to manuscript discovery, manuscript editing and publication, manuscript comparison, manuscript dating, and so on; these endeavors were among the foremost interests of Wissenschaft scholarship.
The
Jewish Encyclopedia is an
English language work, but the vast majority of the encyclopedia's contemporary sources are
German language sources, since this was the mother tongue of the Wissenschaft scholars and the
lingua franca of scholarship in general in that period. Of the works cited which are not German—usually the more classical works—the large part are either Hebrew or Arabic language. The only heavily cited English-language source of contemporary scholarship is Solomon Schechter's publications in the
Jewish Quarterly Review. The significance of the work's publication in English rather than German or Hebrew is captured by
Harry Wolfson writing in 1926 :
However, the editors and authors of the Jewish Encyclopedia proved quite prescient in their choice of language, since within that same span of 25 years, English rose to become the dominant language of international Jewry and of academic Jewish scholarship. Wolfson continues that "if a Jewish Encyclopedia in a modern language were planned for the first time in 1926, the choice would undoubtedly have fallen upon English."
Online version
The unedited text of the original can be found at the Jewish Encyclopedia website. The site offers both
JPEG facsimiles of the original articles and Unicode transcriptions of all texts.
The search capability is somewhat handicapped by the fact that the search mechanism fails to take into account the decision to maintain all diacritical marks in the
transliteration Hebrew language and Aramaic language from the 1901–1906 text, which used a large number of diacriticals not in common use today. Thus, for example, to successfully search for "Halizah" (the ceremony by which the widow of a brother who has died childless released her brother-in-law from the obligation of marrying her), one would have to know that they have transliterated this as "Ḥaliẓah". The alphabetic index ignores diacriticals so it can be more useful when searching for an article whose title is known.
The scholarly apparatus of citation is thorough, but can be a bit daunting to contemporary users. Books that might have been widely known among scholars of Judaism at the time the encyclopedia was written (but which are quite obscure to a lay reader today) are referred to by author and title, but with no publication information and often without indication of the language in which they were written. A list of abbreviations used in the encyclopedia is provided (See Listing of Abbreviations).
Jewish Encyclopedia in Russian
The
Jewish Encyclopedia was heavily used as a source by the 16-volume
Jewish Encyclopedia in
Russian language, published by
Brockhaus and Efron in
Saint Petersburg between 1906 and 1913.
Notes
References
- Singer, Isidore; Alder, Cyrus; (eds.) et al. (1901-1906)The Jewish Encyclopedia. Funk and Wagnalls, New York. LCCN:16014703
See also
- Catholic Encyclopedia
- List of encyclopedias
- Wikipedia:Jewish Encyclopedia topics
- Encyclopædia Biblica
- In Wikipedia, the template {{[Template:JewishEncyclopedia--> can be used to reference the encyclopedia.
External links
- Online version of the 1901–1906 Jewish Encyclopedia: www.jewishencyclopedia.com
- The Jewish Encyclopedia system of transliteration for Hebrew and Aramaic
- The Making of the ENCYCLOPAEDIA JUDAICA and the JEWISH ENCYCLOPEDIA (pdf document) (2002), by David B. Levy.
- Electronic Jewish Encyclopedia based on The Shorter Jewish Encyclopedia (Краткая еврейская энциклопедия) published in Jerusalem in 1976-2005. The Society for Research on Jewish Communities in cooperation with The Hebrew University, Jerusalem
The
Jewish Encyclopedia was an encyclopedia originally published between 1901 and 1906 by
Funk and Wagnalls. It contained over 15,000 articles in 12 volumes on the history and then-current state of Judaism and the Jews as of 1901. It is now a public domain resource.
Jenny Mendelsohn, of
University of Toronto Libraries, in an online guide to major sources of information about Jews and Judaism says of this work, "Although published in the early 1900s, this was a work highly regarded for its scholarship. Much of the material is still of value to researchers in Jewish History." Jenny Mendelsohn, Academic Guide to Jewish History: Encyclopedias and Biographies, University of Toronto Libraries. Last update: August 13, 2006. Accessed October 7, 2006.Reform Judaism rabbi Joshua L. Segal calls it, "a remarkable piece of Jewish scholarship" and adds, "For events prior to 1900, it is considered to offer a level of scholarship superior to either of the more recent Jewish Encyclopedias written in English". Joshua L. Segal, Rabbi's Message: Nov. 2003 - Cheshvan 5764: A Jewish Reference Library at Betenu,
Betenu, Volume 21, No. 4: Nov. 2003. Accessed online October 7, 2006.
The
Jewish Encyclopedia and
Wissenschaft des Judentums
The scholarly style of the
Jewish Encyclopedia is very much in the mode of
Wissenschaft des Judentums studies, an approach to Jewish scholarship and religion that flourished in 19th century Germany; indeed, the Encyclopedia may be regarded as the culmination of this movement (Levy 2002), anticipating the movement's ultimate dispersion in the 20th century to Jewish Studies departments in the United States and
Israel. The scholarly authorities cited in the Encyclopedia—besides the classical and medieval exegesis—are almost uniformly Wissenschaft personalities such as
Leopold Zunz, Moritz Steinschneider,
Solomon Schechter, Wilhelm Bacher,
Samuel Judah Löb Rapoport,
David Zvi Hoffman, Heinrich Graetz, etc. This particular scholarly style can be seen in the
Jewish Encyclopedia's almost obsessive attention to manuscript discovery, manuscript editing and publication, manuscript comparison, manuscript dating, and so on; these endeavors were among the foremost interests of Wissenschaft scholarship.
The
Jewish Encyclopedia is an
English language work, but the vast majority of the encyclopedia's contemporary sources are German language sources, since this was the mother tongue of the Wissenschaft scholars and the
lingua franca of scholarship in general in that period. Of the works cited which are not German—usually the more classical works—the large part are either Hebrew or
Arabic language. The only heavily cited English-language source of contemporary scholarship is Solomon Schechter's publications in the
Jewish Quarterly Review. The significance of the work's publication in English rather than German or Hebrew is captured by
Harry Wolfson writing in 1926 :
However, the editors and authors of the Jewish Encyclopedia proved quite prescient in their choice of language, since within that same span of 25 years, English rose to become the dominant language of international Jewry and of academic Jewish scholarship. Wolfson continues that "if a Jewish Encyclopedia in a modern language were planned for the first time in 1926, the choice would undoubtedly have fallen upon English."
Online version
The unedited text of the original can be found at the Jewish Encyclopedia website. The site offers both JPEG facsimiles of the original articles and
Unicode transcriptions of all texts.
The search capability is somewhat handicapped by the fact that the search mechanism fails to take into account the decision to maintain all
diacritical marks in the transliteration Hebrew language and Aramaic language from the 1901–1906 text, which used a large number of diacriticals not in common use today. Thus, for example, to successfully search for "
Halizah" (the ceremony by which the widow of a brother who has died childless released her brother-in-law from the obligation of marrying her), one would have to know that they have transliterated this as "Ḥaliẓah". The alphabetic index ignores diacriticals so it can be more useful when searching for an article whose title is known.
The scholarly apparatus of citation is thorough, but can be a bit daunting to contemporary users. Books that might have been widely known among scholars of Judaism at the time the encyclopedia was written (but which are quite obscure to a lay reader today) are referred to by author and title, but with no publication information and often without indication of the language in which they were written. A list of abbreviations used in the encyclopedia is provided (See Listing of Abbreviations).
Jewish Encyclopedia in Russian
The
Jewish Encyclopedia was heavily used as a source by the 16-volume
Jewish Encyclopedia in Russian language, published by Brockhaus and Efron in
Saint Petersburg between 1906 and 1913.
Notes
References
- Singer, Isidore; Alder, Cyrus; (eds.) et al. (1901-1906)The Jewish Encyclopedia. Funk and Wagnalls, New York. LCCN:16014703
See also
- Catholic Encyclopedia
- List of encyclopedias
- Wikipedia:Jewish Encyclopedia topics
- Encyclopædia Biblica
- In Wikipedia, the template {{[Template:JewishEncyclopedia--> can be used to reference the encyclopedia.
External links
- Online version of the 1901–1906 Jewish Encyclopedia: www.jewishencyclopedia.com
- The Jewish Encyclopedia system of transliteration for Hebrew and Aramaic
- The Making of the ENCYCLOPAEDIA JUDAICA and the JEWISH ENCYCLOPEDIA (pdf document) (2002), by David B. Levy.
- Electronic Jewish Encyclopedia based on The Shorter Jewish Encyclopedia (Краткая еврейская энциклопедия) published in Jerusalem in 1976-2005. The Society for Research on Jewish Communities in cooperation with The Hebrew University, Jerusalem
Jewish Encyclopedia
Contains the complete contents of the 1906 Jewish Encyclopedia. Over 15,000 articles and pictures about the Torah, history, literature, biography, geography, genealogy, and ...
JewishEncyclopedia.com -
SECTIONS. LITERARY DIRECTORATE LISTING. PREFACE. SYNOPSIS OF JEWISH ENCYCLOPEDIA. SYSTEMS OF TRANSLITERATION CITATION OF PROPER NAMES In all other matters of orthography the ...
Jewish Encyclopedia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Jewish Encyclopedia was an encyclopedia originally published between 1901 and 1906 by Funk and Wagnalls. It contained over 15,000 articles in 12 volumes on the history and then ...
Jew - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A Jew (Hebrew: יְהוּדִי, Yehudi (sl.); יְהוּדִים, Yehudim (pl.); Ladino: ג׳ודיו, Djudio (sl.); ג׳ודיוס, Djudios (pl.); Yiddish: ייִד, Yid (sl ...
Jewish definition of Jewish in the Free Online Encyclopedia.
Jew. Any person whose religion is Judaism. In a wider sense the term refers to any member of a worldwide ethnic and cultural group descended from the ancient Hebrews who ...
Jewish People definition of Jewish People in the Free Online ...
Jew. Any person whose religion is Judaism. In a wider sense the term refers to any member of a worldwide ethnic and cultural group descended from the ancient Hebrews who ...
PERIZZITES (Jewish Encyclopedia) - BibleWiki
Canaanitish tribe settled in the south of Palestine between Hor and Negeb, although it is not mentioned in the genealogy in Gen. x. According to the Biblical references, Abraham ...
Jewish Encyclopedia, 1906 - BibleWiki
The Jewish Encyclopedia was an encyclopedia originally published between 1901 and 1906 by Funk and Wagnalls. It contained over 15,000 articles in 12 volumes on the history and then ...
Jewish nationalist - Hutchinson encyclopedia article about Jewish ...
Zionism. National liberation movement advocating the re-establishment of a Jewish homeland (the Eretz Israel) in Palestine. Here, in the ‘Promised Land’ of the Bible, its ...
Jewish religion - Hutchinson encyclopedia article about Jewish ...
The religion of the ancient Hebrews and their descendants the Jews, based, according to the Old Testament, on a covenant between God and Abraham about 2000 BC, and the renewal of ...